Contrary to prevailing theories on clans, high levels of national identification, as reported in an AsiaBarometer survey conducted in 2005, indicate that citizens of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan possess a greater proclivity to a civic identity than to any other form of subnational identification. This essay examines the relationship between state and society, in order to understand how high levels of national identification can exist in a political and social arena trapped within the traditionalism of clan politics. Although clans remain a source of identification in Central Asia, it does not take precedence over a civic identity among the citizens, as it does among the political elite. The conflicts which have occurred in Kyrgyzst...
The thesis tracks the emergence of western forms of nationalism in republics of Post-Soviet Central ...
National identities, considered a guaran-tee of successful development, were among the priorities fo...
Much of the existing literature on nation-building in Central Asia offers a statist topdown approach...
This study is about the persistence and transformation of clan politics in Tajikistan. It is a singl...
A major debate among scholars studying Central Asian societies concerns the structure of social and ...
Central Asian states are often labelled as failing states by Western scholars because of their inabi...
The article is focused on the analyses of key patterns of local nation-building programs in Central ...
This thesis examines the political development in Central Asia from the onset of independence in 199...
Post-Soviet central Asian states initially diverged into a variety of different regimes. Kyrgyzstan ...
This thesis evaluates the sociological consequences for Soviet Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,...
At the end of 1991 by the dismantling of the Soviet Union (SU), the fifteen successor states of SU h...
After disintegration of the USSR the new independent states faced the need to create the political s...
Traditional pre-tsarist institutions in Central Asia (CA) are viewed as being crucial in domestic po...
This thesis examines the influence of state identity narratives on regional cooperation frameworks i...
The features of formation of statehood in Central Asia in the post-Soviet period are discussed in th...
The thesis tracks the emergence of western forms of nationalism in republics of Post-Soviet Central ...
National identities, considered a guaran-tee of successful development, were among the priorities fo...
Much of the existing literature on nation-building in Central Asia offers a statist topdown approach...
This study is about the persistence and transformation of clan politics in Tajikistan. It is a singl...
A major debate among scholars studying Central Asian societies concerns the structure of social and ...
Central Asian states are often labelled as failing states by Western scholars because of their inabi...
The article is focused on the analyses of key patterns of local nation-building programs in Central ...
This thesis examines the political development in Central Asia from the onset of independence in 199...
Post-Soviet central Asian states initially diverged into a variety of different regimes. Kyrgyzstan ...
This thesis evaluates the sociological consequences for Soviet Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,...
At the end of 1991 by the dismantling of the Soviet Union (SU), the fifteen successor states of SU h...
After disintegration of the USSR the new independent states faced the need to create the political s...
Traditional pre-tsarist institutions in Central Asia (CA) are viewed as being crucial in domestic po...
This thesis examines the influence of state identity narratives on regional cooperation frameworks i...
The features of formation of statehood in Central Asia in the post-Soviet period are discussed in th...
The thesis tracks the emergence of western forms of nationalism in republics of Post-Soviet Central ...
National identities, considered a guaran-tee of successful development, were among the priorities fo...
Much of the existing literature on nation-building in Central Asia offers a statist topdown approach...